Colorado Backcountry Discovery Route

Many thanks to Backcountry Discovery Team for helping to develop and give away these great motorcycle adventures. The free gps routes here are based on the work these riders do and openly share. Thanks gpsKevin

Colorado Backcountry Discovery Route COBDR

The Colorado Backcountry Discovery Route is a panoramic ride
across the state of Colorado, beginning in Four Corners and finishing at the
Wyoming border. The route has been created specifically for adventure
motorcyclists who are interested in exploring Colorado’s magnificent
high-mountain ranges and extraordinary mining country.

The COBDR is an off-road adventure for motorcycle riders covering
several days and traveling through some of the most sensational and mountainous
landscapes in Colorado. The route begins at the Four Corners National
Monument in southern Colorado and ends 675 miles away at the Colorado-Wyoming
border. This route utilizes mostly unpaved roads with rocks, mud, sand
and water crossings that add to the fun and adventure. It is intended for
intermediate to advanced riders, and can be ridden on either street legal
dual-sport or adventure motorcycles.

Navigation Made Easy

I have ridden these routes several times and I highly recommend it. I have made navigation easy for riders by developing a custom GPS chip to simply install into your Garmin gps or BMW gps unit. I have also made matching motorcycle ride maps that you can carry directly in the window of your motorcycle tank bag.

Self Guided Trail

The COBDR is designed to be a self guided adventure. Riders install a custom GPS COBDR microSD Card into their Garmin GPS unit. The routes are then displayed as the rider travels along. Navigation is made easy. Riders can choose to follow along at times or can choose among hard and easy options. Or riders can simply choose to ride off the routes and return to them later. For many, this allows them to just experience the trail without the burden of getting lost.

COBDR Ride Guide Booklet

News: We now have a complete do it yourself ride guide booklet. Now riders can install the custom COBDR GPS chip into their GPS unit and get a complete supporting ride guide to match.

The booklet describes the self guided route and its many options

Booklet COBDR 2016

Booklet COBDR 2016

Supporting material to help you with the ride

COBDRCustom GPS Chip$42

Ride Guide Booklet $20

Letter Sized

8.5x11

Large Section Maps$12

5x7Tank Bag Style

GPSQuick Reference Ride Maps$10

Statewide Travel Map

showing the COBDR route $10

Do this ride yourself: PurchaseGPS microSD Card, Ride Guide, and Maps for this ride.

Note: A Full Rider Packet consists of all 5 items above,

GPS microSD cards work for your Garmin or BMW GPS unit.

Free Shipping

Section Handout Maps

Google Document

Google Document

View the ride on the Satellite Maps

OK since many of you like to study more detail about the ride, below are the ride maps.

I put these ride maps on the web page because I know a few of you love looking at the ride detail and dreaming about the ride. At first glance these maps do not look so impressive, but they are way cool. If you start zooming in, you can see the ride in incredible detail. I have spent a ton of hours sorting through the details of the ride for each day, so for those of you that enjoy this sort of thing, well enjoy!

Legend:

The Blue lines are MAIN COBDR Routes

The Red lines are Hard Alternate Routes

The Green lines are Easy Alternate Routes

Black lines are Out and Backs to Gas and Towns

Colorado BDR

Colorado BDR

FAQ’s

Q: What gas mileage range do I need?

A: 150 miles will cover the longest section

Q: Could I do the ride with the only the use of the State Wide Map?

A: Not really the maps are meant to be used in conjunction with your GPS

Q: Is the COBDR an official route?

A: No: there is no governing body that has declared any official COBDR trail. The route given here is merely a collection of open existing routes across the state. They are subject to all local laws.

Q: Can the route be ridden in the north to south direction.

A: Yes, no problem, just ride it backwards against the GPS arrows.

Q: How do I check my GPS to see if the SD Card is working?

A: There are two ways you can check your GPS.

1. See the trail on the GPS yourself. Turn on the GPS and zoom out to about 50 or 30 miles. Use the cursor to pan over to an area where you know the trail should be. Now begin zooming in. Wait for the gps to refresh it's screen as they can be slow. As you zoom in you should see the trail as a Wide Bold Blue line made up of arrows. OK, good job, you did it right.

2. Check to see if the map is in the GPS unit's memory: The steps to do this vary depending on which Garmin gps unit you have (and there are hundreds). Most work like this:

Alternate 1: From the "Map" page select Menu. Then select "Setup Map" then scroll down and select "Select Map." Now you can scroll down and read the maps in you unit. You should find a map called "TAT gpskevin." Make sure it is enabled and you are done!

Alternate2: Some GPS units (like Nuvi's) work like this. Select "Settings" then "Maps" then "Info" and now you should find the map "TAT gpskevin." Make sure that it is checked and you're done.

Alternate3: Some work like this. Select "Tools" then "Settings" then "Map" then "Map Info." You should find the map "TAT gpskevin." Make sure that it is checked and you're done.

Again, your gps may have a different way to access the maps, but the download does work in all Garmin gps units with a card slot. Sorry, there are just too many garmin gps units for me to go through them all.

If you are new to this stuff or having trouble I will help you at the ride.

Q: What are Custom GPS Ride Maps?A: Custom GPS Ride maps are electronic maps designed specifically to show the paths and path choices for a particular ride. The maps show the paths as clear bold lines so the riders can easily see them even on small screens. The lines are often comprised of groups of arrows or chevrons so that riders can easily tell the recommended direction of travel. The lines come in multiple colors so that riders can easily choose between Hard and Easy options. Custom ride maps make ride navigation much easier than ever before.

Q: Why do the ride lines show up as White Lines rather than the expected Blue, Red and Green?A: There are two possible reasons for this:You have your gps in Night Mode or Auto Mode and you are seeing this after the sun has set. Solution is to put your gps display into Day mode only. See your manual, to do this it depends on which Garmin GPS you have. Or wait and it will work fine during the day.You may have a Garmin 78 and it is in Marine Mode. To fix this: Disable Marine Mode: Select: Menu, Menu, Setup, Marine, Marine Charts Mode: Off

Q: When I purchase GPS Maps on a microSD Card what is included on the card?A: The chip will include the image files used to create the maps and a gpx file that contains all the Tracklogs and Waypoints for the ride. This gpx file can be read by capable garmin GPS units or by Windows based PC's.Q: Why do we use Custom Ride Maps and not Tracks or Routes?A: Ride maps function the same as Tracks, however ride maps are made with much higher accuracy and clear line types and colors, The lines can also include arrows to help riders with direction of travel. Additionally riders do not need to know anything about tracks or which one they maybe be riding. So this makes it much easier for the riders.Q: What are Tracks and why are they not recommended?A: Tracks (or sometimes called Tracklogs) are a collection of electronic breadcrumbs that can describe the desired path. There can be thousands of these electronic data points to describe one path. Each ride can be made up of many sets of these paths. As a result, the number of Tracklogs for a ride with several choices can become very confusing. Therefore I do not recommend that riders use tracks as it can often create confusion. Tracklogs are often included on the MicroSD card for those riders that would like to import them to a PC and edit them to create their own ride.Q: What are Routes and why are they not used?A: Routes are paths that are created by your GPS unit based on the internal maps that you have. This enables your unit to give you turn by turn directions. Routes are calculated based on lots of different parameters like shortest distance, fastest time, and many others. However we as riders would like to choose our own specific path. And often our path does not include known roads that would be in your GPS mapset. Therefore, to avoid traveling on undesired paths and constant off route recalculation, we do not use Routes and force your GPS to display our desired path only. Q: What are Waypoints? and how are they used?A: Waypoints are sets of coordinates that identify a point in physical space used for purposes of navigation, otherwise known as a landmark. Waypoints are used to describe all kinds of locations on these rides like scenic points, river crossings, lunch stops, motel locations, and camp spots. Most of the microSD cards include a set of ride specific waypoints. Depending on your GPS model, these waypoints can either be automatically included in your GPS or you may need to import them into your GPS.

Warning:

Any and all riding is on you own

Conditions change and Routes may not be navigable

Legal access can change and is not guaranteed. Riders must assess the local conditions.